- By Doggieuk9
- / July 19, 2023
- / Blog, Public Health
Researchers Map Dog Epigenome For The FirstTime
Researchers have successfully mapped the dog epigenome, opening the door to an improved understanding of how environmental factors influence their genetic expression, as well as ours.
Epigenetics is the study of how behaviors and the environment cause changes to the way genes work. Unlike genetic changes, epigenetic changes are reversible and don’t alter the DNA sequence but can change how the body reads a sequence of DNA.
Because of dogs’ accelerated biological clocks and shorter lifespans, compared to humans, they can act as lookouts, responding more quickly to environmental risk factors and alerting us to potential dangers. But despite our very long relationship with humankind’s best friend, we lacked a reference epigenome for dogs.
New Ground Breaking Study
Now, researchers at the Seoul National University have closed that knowledge gap, creating a high-quality reference map of the dog epigenome for the first time, providing a means for genomics research and comparative studies with humans and other species.
The researchers focused on one breed – the beagle – and closely examined 11 major dog tissues: the brain (cerebrum and cerebellum), mammary gland, lung, liver, stomach, spleen, pancreas, kidney, colon and ovary. They then used the genetic data they collected to create a functional genome annotation, marking specific features in DNA, RNA or protein sequences with descriptive information about structure or function.
They compared the dog epigenome to existing human and mouse epigenomes. Through their work, which they named EpiC Dog (Epigenome Catalog of the Dog), the researchers found conserved and dynamic functional characteristics shared between different tissues and species. Most notably, the dog epigenome was found to more closely resemble the human epigenome than the mouse’s, suggesting similarities in how genes are regulated with implications for human health and disease.